Music Trade Review

Issue: 1907 Vol. 44 N. 13

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THE MUSIC TRADE
EDWARD LYMAN BILL, - Editor and Proprietor
J. B. SPILLANE, Managing Editor
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Directory ol Plaao The directory of piano manufacturing firms and corporation*
M-«
•__•....
found on another page will be of great yalue, as a reference
M a n u f a c t u r e r s . f o r d e a l e r , a n d others.
Exposition Honors Won by The Review
ttfdnd Prim
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NEW YORK, MARCH 30, 1907
EDITORIAL
A PROMINENT piano manufacturer, while discussing the sub-
x x ject of industrial schools, put the question: "Will not the
general introduction of industrial or trade schools usher in a new
era, helping to solve many of the vexed problems of capital and
labor?" Hard to answer, but it will make life more worth living
to many thousands of workingmen who are naturally ambitious to
make their work effective and to acquire success in their trade by
placing within their reach the means of acquiring a thorough knowl-
edge of their trade or craft? And is it not a fact that the intelli-
gent, competent workman, who is satisfied with the outlook which
his efficiency is winning for him, is the one who attends strictly to
the work he has in hand and who has neither the inclination nor the
time to spend in preaching the gospel of discontent and warfare
against those who are really desirous of bettering their condition?
The view is not at all Utopian which looks forward to the industrial
or trade schools of the future as a prime factor in ushering in a new
era of industrial peace and bringing about a better understanding
between employer and employe, replacing the present atmosphere
of unrest and dissatisfaction with one in which a mutual confidence
and respect will exist, thus giving our country the assurance of a
long period of prosperity in which the wage-earner will participate.
The time is coming, not so far distant either, when employers as
well as intelligent American labor will demand the establishment of
trade schools, and that a part of the public school money be ex-
pended for training of workmen, and the efficiency which these
trade schools shall promote, added to the American genius for
production, invention and the use of machinery, combined with
business enterprise and method, will render invincible the industrial
power of this country and give assurance of its continued com-
mercial supremacy.
r
I ''HERE is no doubt but that the industrial schools will play a
A very important part in the future development of this country,
and, in our opinion, some of the millions expended for libraries
throughout the country would be productive of better results if
they were devoted to industrial and technical schools. The late
REVIEW
Charles Hackley, president of the Chase-Hackley Piano Co., of
Muskegon, Mich., was a philanthropist in the truest sense, and he
founded one of the best equipped technical schools in the world.
A clear-headed, farsighted business man, he saw the advantage of
a school of this kind to the young men of his city, and he generously
gave of his great wealth to help them to acquire a technical educa-
tion. It would be easy, indeed, to establish a department of piano
building as a feature in one of these schools. And this reminds us,
by the way, that the Young Men's Christian Association of New
York is now discussing the question of opening a school of piano
making, along the lines of the classes now devoted to spreading a
knowledge of several other industries and which have done so much
for the advancement in position and knowledge of the young men
of New York. Then there is the Society of Mechanics & Trades-
men, of which William E. Strauch, of Strauch Bros., the eminent
piano action manufacturers, is president. It would not be a bad
idea were this famous society, which has done so much to help
along the ambitious young workmen of New York, to take up this
matter of piano construction in its entirety. Where are the piano
makers of the future—that is, the skilled men, the creative brains—
to come from, unless trained at some special school or under the
personal direction of some of the leaders of our times?
RE we willing to admit that the piano has reached a point
from which it is impossible to make further development?
We hardly think so, because that is not the American method. We
never concede that we have reached a point beyond which it is not
possible to go. It may be that as far as volume of tone goes we
have reached the limit, but as far as quality and other essentials
in this connection are concerned, there is still much to be accom-
plished, and surely higher results will not be won by the average
piano workman who, to-day, under our specialized factory system,
has but a knowledge of one part of piano making. Working in one
department, he has no accurate knowledge of any of the other
closely relating branches of the industry, and he can never be a
piano maker from the standpoint of the old manufacturers, who
were always proud to wear their white aprons at their daily tasks
and were prouder still of their knowledge of scale draughting and
acoustics.
A
"T? VERY piano man in the Empire State is interested in the
J—l/ financial resources of this great Commonwealth, and here
are some figures that will interest. According to the annual re-
port of the New York savings banks the number of depositors is
now 2,753,295, and the total of their deposits is over $1,400,000,000,
an amount greater than the bonded debt of the United States.
These depositors, who outnumber the inhabitants of Manhattan
Island, are to be commended for their wisdom. If all men of small
means were to follow their example the community as a whole
would be much better off. There was not one savings bank failure
in the past year. There is not a single savings bank now whose
report is not creditable to its management and whose solvency is
not beyond question.
In these days of get-rich-quick schemes, of mining stocks, of
speculation in bucket-shops, poolrooms, on the curb and in the
Stock Exchange, it is most timely to turn to the savings banks and
to point out the superiority to every man of small earnings and
limited means of depositing a definite surplus regularly at interest.
For a rich man to speculate is one thing. He can afford to
lose some money. He has time for personal investigation of the
risk and he has the power to enforce his legal rights. He may
win or he may lose, but in either case the transfer of wealth is not
a vital matter.
To all men who work for wages or on salaries their only hope
for a peaceful old age and for a life free from racking money cares
is to provide beforehand for the future. They should take no risk.
When they speculate they stake their family's future and their own
peace of mind against a few dollars. Even were the chances equal
—and in the case of a small man the odds are always against him—
the risk which he takes is vastly disproportionate to any possible
gain.
HIS piling up of money in the savings banks will be a splendid
power to offset that great depression which some of our
leading financiers, like James J. Hill and others, are predicting is
about to come upon us. Few men ever heard of progressive com-
T
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
pound interest and still fewer know what it does. One dollar de-
posited in a savings bank which pays 4 per cent, will amount to
$2.19 in twenty years. This is simple compound interest. But
how many men know that if they deposit one dollar every year the
value in twenty years will amount to $30.97? Any man or
woman who is earning wages at all can save one dollar a week.
That money deposited in a savings bank for twenty years will be
$1,612. A deposit of five dollars a week will amount to over $8,000.
The annual interest on this at 4 per cent, would be $320 a year.
Thus a man who deposits five dollars a week in a savings bank can
after twenty years draw out six dollars a week and still leave to
his wife and children at his death all the money that he deposited
and more than half as much more. There is no paradox or catch
in this. It is a plain, simple mathematical statement of what any
savings bank will do.
Every young clerk and salesman should read these figures and
go over them for themselves. They are accurate. The only neces-
sity is to make the deposits regularly. If, instead of discontinuing
the weekly deposits at twenty years, they are continued for ten
years more, every dollar a week will have become $58.38 and the
$52 a year will have become over $3,000. For every dollar which,
had been deposited two dollars a week can then be drawn out with-
out impairing the principal, which has been doubled.
It takes time to make money this way, but the result is certain.
There is no secret about it, no mystery, no allurement, no dazzling
speculation. All that it requires is industry and a little self-denial
every week. It pays better than any gold or copper mine, than
any poolroom or bucket-shop. If the young men would only study
this plan of making money, how much better off they would be.
And fortunate it is for the State of New York that so many citizens
have recognized the value of modest thrift and honorable frugality.
What a tremendous piano purchasing power lies in this ac-
cumulation of dollars, one piled upon another!
T
HERE is occasionally quoted in argument or commendation
the alleged remark of the millionaire that riches had added
nothing to his happiness, and that all he had received for his labor
and responsibility was his "board and clothes." The rich man who
can control capital in active operation, the man who has patiently
built up a big business of which he is the head, could never have
accomplished his great purpose if he was actuated by the spirit as
he went along that he could get out of it only enough to keep him
from the charity of the public. The man who is at the head of a
large mercantile concern could not have won his place if he had
not been broader in his views than this sentiment would indicate.
He may not be an avowed philanthropist, but he is certainly a bene-
factor, for he is a creator of something—he has not only made two
blades of business grass grow where none grew before, but he has
made and is making thousands of people happy through his enor-
mous distribution of monies at regular intervals.
M
OST men love to do business, whether making pianos or any-
thing else, for many reasons beyond the mere getting of
money. They like work, power, responsibility, the incentive that
comes from opposition. They like to grow two blades of grass
where one was struggling before. They take heart in the struggle,
and the more they do the more they feel capable of doing. They
are happiest when on deck and the deck cleared for action. They
enlarge their souls, their mental visions, their faculties, their ap-
preciation of opportunities, their ideas of their fellowmen, in the
daily contact with difficulties, and in the push against barriers.
Does a man of this sort get nothing in return except the material
thing? Is it only a question of board, and clothes, and a sheltering
roof ? Stuff and nonsense.
r
I ^HERE is a charm, a fascination, about the acquirement of
X
wealth, not merely for the money itself, but for the power it
gives. Edward H. Harriman, who is perhaps the most colossal,
cold-blooded manipulator of railroads that the world has ever seen,
has said that he cares nothing for money for money itself, but he
loved the, power which it gave him to make big deals. To see
Mr. Harriman it would seem as if there were truth in his remarks.
The suit of clothes which he wears daily would not cost more than
an ordinary bookkeeper's in a piano factory. He wears no jewelry,
and a simple black string tie is his regular neckwear.
He does not indulge in any of the vices or any of the so-called
luxuries to the extent of some of our millionaires. His living ex-
penses are extremely modest, when considering the vast sums
which he controls, so, really, what is money to him other than the
means of acquiring with it great power? It is not money itself,
because presumably he does not spend more money than many ordi-
narily rich merchants.
I
T makes a difference from what vantage ground we view these
things; and, after all, these great men, leaders of industry and
of finance, who are accused during their lives of all sorts of
crookedness, in the end often become benefactors. They
play their part in the great drama of life and many of them carry
things to such an extreme that there is a revulsion of public feeling
-—and in the end great reforms are accomplished which otherwise
would not have been won but for their abuse of position. John D.
Rockefeller may yet be canonized instead of caricatured. Mr.
Rockefeller toys lightly with millions, and he tosses them away as
indifferently as he brings them in, and his princely gifts to educa-
tion have surpassed those of any other human being since time
began, and a man who gives to the cause of education should readily
be forgiven many other misdeeds.
There is a disposition to condemn men for the use of what we
commended them until we saw the cruelty of its extreme use.
Organization of the steel company saved us from monopoly of one
man of the iron and steel business of the country, which is now
owned by thousands and operated in a business way. We owe
much of our continued prosperity to its business methods, and if
we must have a panic they will save much of its severity by the
judicious use of their business method.
HERE are all sorts of views concerning the present condition
of business. One well-known member of the trade said
recently, it will be necessary for business to change in some degree,
else the whole country will break down under the strain which it is
laboring now. There was a day when one prayed for prosperity.
It becomes serious for men in this day and time to pray for a let-up
on things. The fact is the whole country is drunk on prosperity,
and now, as it ever has been, men do not grow better under pros-
perity, and the history of the world does not reveal a people who
have attained their highest degree of efficiency under prosperity,
but rather adversity; hence we have all of these scandals and get-
rich-quick schemes that are abroad in the land, and men are not
content longer to pursue the even tenor of life and to be satisfied
with the ordinary returns from business, but every man who makes
a thousand wants ten, and he who gets ten wants a hundred, and
so on.
One of the greatest difficulties that stand in the way with
people now in enjoying the present prosperity is this, they are so
selfishly anxious for it to continue that they cannot half enjoy the
present anticipating when it may cease.
T
T is interesting to note the experience of one piano manufacturer
who expended a good deal of money in writing letters to
prospective customers. He followed up this system exhaustively,
and he hoped for good results. They did not come, however.
Letter writing is all right in its place, but personal calls are a mighty
sight better. Yet in no department of business has there been a
greater change in the last few years than in the matter of business
correspondence. The business letter of a few years ago was as
dead as an Egyptian mummy, as wooden and awkward as a cigar
store Indian, as formal and stilted as a legal document and as unin-
teresting as a page from an ancient dictionary.
There was a time when the ox-cart was considered a sufficiently
rapid means of locomotion but that time has passed, and the electric
car and automobile have come to take the ox-cart's place. Just as
surely the old-time business soliciting letter is passing out of date
and is being replaced by something infinitely better. We must admit,
however, that it is coming about slowly. The principles of effective
business letter writing are not yet widely diffused. There are some
people who know how to present a business proposition when they
are in the bodily presence of a prospect, but who feel utterly incapa-
ble of getting their salesmanship on paper. A strange kind of
paralysis seems to come over them at the sight of a pen. They lose
all their force; they feel constrained; they adopt a stiff, formal and
utterly unnatural manner. Such letters do not pull, for a cold letter
never enthuses or even arouses the slightest interest.
I

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